The First Thing Ever Sold Online Was a Bag of Weed
Internet Rule 34 is: If it exists, there’s porn of it. I’d add another rule: If you can send money on the internet, you can find someone who’ll exchange it for drugs.
Internet Rule 34 is: If it exists, there’s porn of it. I’d add another rule: If you can send money on the internet, you can find someone who’ll exchange it for drugs.
The Server Box actually comes with everything you’ll need to grow a small garden indoors, even in a dark corner of your basement. What exactly you'll grow? Well that's up to you...
Where this kind of technology will really shine is in a few years when all cars are connected.
Jabba the Hutt realised that R2-D2 was better suited to serving drinks on his sail barge than being a sassy sidekick to C-3PO, and apparently Haier Asia’s AQUA brand agrees. It's made a life-size R2-D2 mini fridge that can actually deliver your drinks. Read More >
It turns out that the animal we used to regard as a pest are our allies in the War on Terror.
Is the company planning an all-you-can-eat streaming service?
As the bombs were dropped, we presume the pilots shouted "...Retweet THIS!"
Prepare to die! (Statistically. Maybe.)
Want to know more about the mysterious Magic Leap and its plan to make virtual objects appear in the real world? Watch this fireside chat with three of the company’s leaders, including Snow Crash author Neal Stephenson. [MIT Tech Review]
The wider universe has a quite few tricks up its collective sleeve to wipe us from the map, so that mad bloke on Oxford St with the sandwich board is actually right - doom is nigh!
"Automated drone inspection" of lightning-struck planes coming in 2016.
You could have 24 of them grafted onto your stomach to conveyor-belt sandwich crumbs back up to your mouth.
Just a few more years of construction-related faffing about to go.
The pilot of White Knight Two, which carried the doomed SpaceShipTwo to altitude, recalls the harrowing event.
Imagine having a man on a bike to power your entire home.
While it’s great that this generation of billionaires want to write their own chapter of urban history, both in NYC, London, and elsewhere, should they have carte blanche?